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Playing Soccer In Space Looks More Fun Than It Is On Earth

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If you think soccer is a blast on grass, you should try it in space.

To celebrate the start of the 2014 World Cup today, astronauts Reid Wiseman, Steve Swanson and Alexander Gerst put on a little demo of microgravity soccer aboard the International Space Station. Just check it out in the video above -- you'll get a kick out of it.

The crew also gave a little pep talk to the soccer teams back on Earth.

"Have fun," Wiseman says in the video. "Play hard, and we'll be watching on the International Space Station."

Much like Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, this crew has been highly visible and engaged online. You may already be familiar with Wiseman, who got raves for posting the first 'Vine' from space on social media.

When they're not aiming to connect with soccer fans, the crew has other goals -- including conducting research on the health risks of long-duration space flights.

The iPhone Photography Awards Are Here! And Yes, These Were Taken With A Smart Phone

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It's official. That little camera lens on the back of your smart phone can capture way more than your Vegas trip or Saturday brunch. The results of this year's iPhone Photography Awards (IPPAWARDS) are in and, as usual, they're absolutely mesmerizing.

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Julio Lucas, Bradenton, FL United States 1st Place - 2014 Photographer of the Year


The competition, which dates back to 2007, the year of the iPhone's debut, is the first and longest photo contest focused on the powers of your favorite portable photography device. Thousands of artists from all over the world contributed their best images captured via iPhone, iPod or iPad, submitting them to 17 categories including sunsets, travel and architecture. The photos can be manipulated on phone apps like Instagram, but Photoshop and other desktop post-processing methods are prohibited. As you'll see, most photographers don't even need to manipulate their stunning images with faux vintage filters.

This year 54 photographers took home prizes, hailing from 17 countries overall. The winning images range from adorable animals to breathtaking landscapes to aesthetically intriguing architectural forms. We've included a small fraction of the victors below. Take a look and perhaps you'll be inspired by the vast artistic potential just waiting in your humble iOS. Check out the IPPA website to learn about how you can be a part of next year's competition.

This Syrian-Born Artist Is Using Her Illustrations To Help Child Refugees

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TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — When Lina Safar moved from her native Syria to Tampa with her U.S.-born husband in 2010, she assumed she would return occasionally, see her family, walk in her neighborhood and shop at her favorite markets.

A year later, her country was engulfed by civil war and Safar watched in horror from afar. Safar's father, a physician, was killed while helping the wounded. Her mother and brother fled and joined Safar at her Tampa townhome.

There's no way of telling when Safar will return for a visit, if ever. The 31-year-old children's book illustrator now remembers her country through her own paintings — and by helping Syria's displaced children. Safar recently illustrated a series of workbooks for Syrian refugee children as part of a program sponsored by Mercy Corps, a humanitarian aid organization.

Mercy Corps spokeswoman Andie Long said Safar's illustrations will be in books in English and in Arabic that train adults how to properly care for displaced children. There are also accompanying workbooks for the children.

According to UNICEF, some 5.5 million Syrian children have been affected by the war, with more than 1 million children living as refugees in neighboring Mideast countries.

"These are circumstances where the number of people affected is so enormous," Long said.

Safar studied art in Damascus and met her husband there. She was working with international publishers on illustrating children's books while in Syria, and continued when she married and came to the U.S. She said work on the project for Syrian children affected her deeply.

"I was constantly thinking about Syria. But not only Syria today, not the present, the sad situation, but going through a lot of memories, going through and trying to recreate the details of the everyday life I remember," she said.

The book titled "My Story" provides a way for the displaced children to write and illustrate their own histories, feelings and memories while giving them a measure of control over their lives. Safar's ethereal, colorful drawings frame open-ended questions such as, "My favorite animal is..." ''Our family traditions..." or "My goals are..."

"It was very helpful for me, to feel that I was able to contribute in one way or another," she said. "This was just a small piece of me that I could send back to those children and the people of Syria."



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#Roofline_Envelope Series Turns Houses Into Stationary

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"Flipping houses" just took on a whole new meaning thanks to Instagrammer Geof Newsum's Pinterest-perfect project.

Known as #roofline_envelope, the series was born after Newsum took a simple photo of the roof of a nearby building that, when flipped, looked like an envelope. Since that time, over 41 adorable homes (and counting) have managed to transform themselves into stationary through his quirky (but oh so genius) art project. And while the hashtag is rapidly expanding to the local Instagram community and beyond, Newsum is focusing on narrowing his own mission.

“I’ve been wanting to create a special series based on endangered historic homes in Phoenix," the Arizona resident explained on the Instagram blog. "I love the stories found in local architecture.”











To see more of the series, browse the #roofline_envelope hashtag and discover Newsum's very own work by following @slowjam98 on Instagram.

These Are The Best Parts Of '22 Jump Street'

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"22 Jump Street" isn't just the year's best sequel thus far, it might be the most self-aware follow-up film in the history of cinema. This thing's got jokes and gags from beginning to end, and even through the credits. "It definitely helps to let the audience know that you know what they know," co-director Chris Miller told HuffPost Entertainment of the meta commentary on movie sequels that pervades the narrative. "That's nice and it lets them feel like they're part of the club." With "22 Jump Street" out in theaters now, everyone can join the club. Ahead, the four most effective parts of the summer’s second funniest film. (Sorry, "Neighbors" still rules.)

Everything Jillian Bell Says

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Some people might know Jillian Bell from "Workaholics" or her supporting parts in "Bridesmaids" and "The Master." For everyone else, "22 Jump Street" will be their first exposure to the young actress, and, wow, it is quite an impression. Bell simply steals all her scenes in "22 Jump Street," whether that means ripping on Jonah Hill's Schmidt for being old, or -- as "22 Jump Street" hits its raucous third act -- participating in the film's physical comedy highlight. Here's how funny Bell is: In the "22 Jump Street" red-band trailer she has one of the best lines ("You look old as shit to be here"). Not only is that dialogue not in the finished film, but even if it were, the joke wouldn't crack a top-10 list of her best zingers. We are living in Jillian Bell's America now. Welcome.

Channing Tatum's Chemistry With Wyatt Russell

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So much has been written about Channing Tatum's chemistry with Jonah Hill in the "21 Jump Street" franchise -- no, really, these two even got on the cover of Entertainment Weekly -- but let's pour some out for Tatum and Wyatt Russell. The son of Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn, Wyatt Russell looks a little like Owen Wilson (he's Fauxen Wilson, as one of our friends called him after seeing the film) and he carries himself with a similar laid-back demeanor. It's a personality that matches well with Tatum, who imbibes Jenko with the dumb-jock sincerity of a big puppy dog. Russell's so good that you almost want Jenko leave Schmidt for a lifetime of bro hugs and beer drinking with his new pal. He's the Ralph Bellamy of dude friendships.

Ice Cube's Text Messages To Jonah Hill

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Ice Cube's Captain Dickson gets a major arc in "22 Jump Street," and part of it involves him sending threatening text messages to Schmidt. He uses emojis. Shoshanna would approve.

The End Credits Should Get A Best Picture Nomination

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No spoilers, but if the "22 Jump Street" end credits take home Best Picture at the Academy Awards in 2015, don't say we didn't warn you. The credits sequence is the funniest comedy kicker since the guys in "The Hangover" looked through their digital camera. Here's why: It takes the film's running meta commentary on movie sequels to a logical conclusion that is both riotous, depressing and just too real. Sometimes critics can be snarky and write that the best part of a movie was its end credits; with "22 Jump Street" that's not only true, but a huge compliment.

Touching Photos Show The Love, Suffering And Dreams Of People Over 70 Years Old

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"If you are lucky, you get old," proclaims Freya Najade's ongoing photography project.

As the title suggests, or merely hints at, the series consists of a collection of portraits of aging individuals, men and women who've lived to and beyond their 70th birthdays. From a pair of legs dipped in a pool to a flannel-wearing woman perched atop an ottoman, the pictures frame a vast range of subjects including people, places and things. But no matter the imagery, the sentiment is the same: It's "a photographic project to show that inner growth is ever lasting and that humans above seventy continue to love, suffer and dream."

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Najade says the phrase -- "If you are lucky, you get old" -- dawned upon her only after she embarked on the project, initially aimed at generally exploring the lives and ideas of senior citizens. She set out to spend time with individuals older than herself, many living in retirement communities and senior centers across the U.S. She photographed five in total, capturing photos and anecdotes that illuminate the stories of people dealing, like everyone else, with heartbreak, loss, desire and ambition.

"To my surprise, the old people were not just proud of their age and the fact that they made it that far in life, they were also still falling in love and breaking up," Najade recounts. "They were overcoming their lifetime partner’s death, living out their erotic fantasies or dealing with the loss of their sexual desire. Talking to them showed me that inner growth is ever lasting..."

Najade's subjects include Dennis (76), Rae (80), Roy (80), Thelma (82) and Chris (70), stunning models that opened their homes and selves to the artist. Those five are just the start, though. Najade is currently campaigning for support for another edition of the project on Kickstarter. The lead image there (see above) shows an older man, clad in what appears to be a racing helmet and parachute gear. That man is named Dennis.

"I have my own house, where I live half of the year," he explained to Najade. "Sometimes I don’t talk for a week to anybody there. In the summer I rent a room in a gay retirement home. I enjoy meeting people of my kind." Another image of Dennis shows a portrait of the man dressed as a woman. "I feel that I am transforming from a catapillar [sic] into a butterfly. Sometimes I go out like this. If people don’t like it, it is their problem."

Dennis' daredevil equipment and gender-bending garter belt, like the objects and settings of other portraits in the series, lightheartedly point to the broad range of personalities that only begin to tap into the gorgeous complexities of old age. As Najade explains, the helmet is part of Dennis' flight gear. "I particularly like this picture because Dennis looks so strong, excited but in the same time also vulnerable. All characteristics I associate with old age.”

With the Kickstarter funds, Najade hopes to spend at least two more months meeting and photographing individuals. "I will embark on this trip regardless of the funds I have raised, but how long I can stay and how many different stories I can tell is upon you," she writes on her page. You can see a preview of the project here and head over to the Kickstarter site to learn more. Let us know your thoughts on the portraits in the comments.

20 Full Moon Artworks To Welcome Tonight's Spooky Honey Moon

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Today, dear readers, is Friday the 13th, an unlucky day for superstitious folks of Western tradition. Those who suffer from friggatriskaidekaphobia, as it is called, fear that when the unlucky day that is Friday couples with the unlucky number that is 13, mysterious forces are afoot.

This evening, however, is especially spooky because this particular June 13th happens to also fall on a full honey moon, making the lunar orb appear larger and more amber-toned than any other time of year.

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Henri Rousseau, The Sleeping Gypsy, 1897


This natural phenomenon occurs during the month of the summer solstice when the moon is at its lowest. The elongated wavelengths of light, due to our atmosphere's pollution, create a warm, reddish glow -- a similar occurrence to that witnessed at sunset.

The honey moon was expected to reach its full phase at 12:13 EDT -- we know, another 13! But the most visually enchanting point in the evening probably came earlier, when the moon was closer to the horizon and thus appears larger to the naked eye. This was the first honey moon to fall on a Friday the 13th since June 13, 1919, and another isn't coming until 2098. So in honor of this festive occasion, we've gathered up a brief compendium of the ample moon as artistic muse.

Behold, 20 artistic reasons artists have always looked to the night sky for inspiration, especially on the occasion of a full moon. Let us know which of your favorite moon moments in art we missed in the comments and enjoy the haunted honey moon!

Roku And Hachi, Instagram's Favorite Cat Couple, Have Some Exciting News To Share

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Allow us to introduce you to this handsome devil named Roku. According to his Instagram bio, he is a rather special cat.

"I have aerodynamic ears and silver fur. I eat rainbows and poop butterflies."

Well, maybe that last part is an exaggeration, but there's certainly something unique about this feline, as he has over 350,000 followers.



This stunner is Roku's cat "wife," Hachi.



And this is their adorable love story.



The two Scottish Folds live in Thailand with their Instagramming humans, one of whom is a photographer who goes by the name "SixtySix" according to InStyle. Roku came to live with his humans less than two years ago, but fit right in.

Last October, the family added the adorable Hachi into the mix, and although it took a while, the two kitties get along great now.





In fact, recently they had some good news to share ...



Hachi had four beautiful kittens!





They're now proud parents of some of the cutest kittens we've ever seen.



The kittens will remain unnamed until around 8 weeks old. That's when their characteristics will emerge, such as folded or straight ears.

To keep up with the adorable little cat family, follow the Instagram of either Hachi or Roku.


h/t InStyle

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Watch The Dying Art Of Neon Sign-Making In Hong Kong

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Before artists like Dan Flavin and Tracey Emin turned neon into a six figure trade, the sizzling tubular lights were all function. They lit the streets of the U.S. as early as the 1920s, advertising motels and drug stores, before spreading worldwide.

But it was in China that they reached their pinnacle. A neon arms race between Shanghai and Hong Kong meant both cities became major producers of the stuff, so that by the 1980s, when American shop owners swayed by changing public taste were opting instead for internally-lit shadow boxes, you couldn’t find an alley in Hong Kong undazzled by a rainbow of meticulously bent, glowing characters. So drenched was the city, Ridley Scott famously used it as inspiration for his vision of a glamorously seamy future in "Blade Runner," eschewing the dark streets of New York as too “medieval.”

Fast forward a few decades later and the glow is dimming, even in Hong Kong. The expense and artistry required to install neon and argon -- an analog that produces blue light -- is turning shopkeepers to an alternative: LED. The technology is cheaper, but as any neonophile will tell you, LED creates more light pollution, and is not nearly so atmospheric.

“These signs are starting to disappear quickly,” Aric Chen, a curator at the city’s futuristic M+ museum, told The Wall Street Journal this spring. “As the saying goes, you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone.”

The museum is hoping to turn the tide back with a sprawling, online exhibit. On display through the end of June, NEONSIGNS.HK includes a dense timeline of neon history, user-submitted photos of neon signs in Hong Kong, and a steady stream of essays and other musings. One of the gems of the exhibit is the video above, a short documentary about the dying industry.

Like all consuming professions, the world of neon is a hermetic one, and its inhabitants speak in a kind of code. “Chicken intestine,” “thousand layer paper,” “light head,” “iron heart transformers”: the video's concern with such minutiae makes it both fascinating and sad to watch. The men profiled -- all longtime neon manufacturers -- speak of their work with the same mix of despair and submission as a farmer after a bad harvest. “Who can bear it?” asks one, before walking the videographer through the careful process of giving a sign life.

Your Definitive Guide To Reading A Piece Of Abstract Art

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Abstract art can be a doozy. We'd be lying if we said we've never approached a daunting canvas buzzing with indiscernible colors, shapes and stripes and, on the verge of a panic attack, grasped for the nearest museum guide.

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Ellsworth Kelly


It's hard to shake the nagging desire to solve the puzzle at hand, parse through the images and figure out what it all means. But, in our hearts, we know abstract art is no Sunday morning crossword puzzle, and should not be treated as such. On that note, we're diving in.

Abstract art is a beast all its own, and as such requires our utmost attention, patience and imagination. "Abstraction is staggeringly radical, circumvents language, and sidesteps naming or mere description," Jerry Saltz writes in his wonderful manifesto on abstraction. "It disenchants, re-enchants, detoxifies, destabilizes, resists closure, slows perception, and increases our grasp of the world." And so it may, but how do we actually engage with it?

We're taking it slow and attempting to navigate the perilous waters of abstract art one step at a time. Consider this a beginner's guide to a lifelong relationship between, you, art, and your spirit guide Jerry Saltz. Here are nine things to consider next time you approach a seemingly impenetrable work of abstract art.

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Clyfford Still


There's no code to crack.

As human beings, we take pleasure in solving problems. While this is useful in many aspects of life, the realm of abstract art is not one of them. Take a deep breath and let go of the desire to align every brushstroke to a symbolic meaning, every color to an aspect of the artist's biography. While "getting" an artwork brings a momentary feeling of victory, bathing in its mystery brings enjoyment for far longer.

Don't look at the clock.

How long should you take to digest and fully experience a work of art? While the average time spent in front a museum artwork is around 30 seconds, truly taking in an artwork can take years. (Remember when Saltz said abstraction slowed perception?) Kitty Scott, director of visual arts at the Banff Centre, likened learning an artist's visual language to learning a new written one. "Over the years, you may see 20 works, and then you start to understand their language and what their subject is," she explained.

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Cy Twombly


Don't talk about your five-year-old.

You know, and have likely felt the urge to recite, the old "my five-year-old could do that." And yes, sometimes it's hard to reckon how a white canvas can sit in the MoMA and not in the "before" pile of an artist's studio. One artist whose work is often looped into this category of the "childhish" is Cy Twombly, whose loopy scribbles often resemble youthful nonsense. But this passage by Roland Barthes may change your mind:

"It is not childish in form, for the child applies himself, presses down, rounds off, sticks out his tongue in his efforts, the child works hard to join the code of grown-ups. [Twombly] draw away from it, loosens, lags behind, his hand seems to levitate -- as if the word had been written with his fingertips, not out of disgust or boredom but out of a kind of caprice open to the memory of a defunct culture which has left no more than the trace of a few words."

Now, could your child do that?

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Wassily Kandinsky


Don't think of a picture, think of a thing.

When we look at a picture, there are certain questions that immediately come to mind. The simplest being, What is it a picture of? When you shift gears a little, you're free to open your mind up to the many questions that could make their way into your brain. What is this thing? What is it made of? What's its speed? Its texture? Is it peaceful or cacophonous, heavy or light, open or closed? These questions, unlike the first, have no definitive answers, but may help you locate a starting point from which to navigate the artistic world before you.

One easy place to start is color. As Wassily Kandinsky, one of the first abstract artists, wrote: "Color is a power which directly influences the soul. Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the hammers, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist is the hand which plays, touching one key or another, to cause vibrations in the soul." Perhaps start there. What colors do you see, hear and feel?

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Mark Rothko


Ditch the questions completely.

If asking questions feels too much like a cross examination, focus on affirmative statements instead. It may sound cliche to think about how the painting makes you feel, but the sentiment isn't actually too far off. After all, abstract artist Agnes Martin did say "Abstract art is the concrete representation of our most subtle feelings."

In his book "Pictures and Tears" James Elkins perused a guest book at the permanent display at the Rothko Chapel. From reading the visitor comments, one would expect the viewers had just witnessed a supernatural event or a religious epiphany rather than sat before an artwork. Comments ranged from "This makes me fall down," to "The silence pierces deeply, to the heart. Once more I am moved -- to tears." Sometimes asking questions only proves to be a distraction.

That being said, don't stress about getting emotional.

We know few things are more frustrating than watching a fellow museum-goer weep uncontrollably in front of an artwork you think is just okay. You don't have to love or even like every piece. Don't be afraid to move on and find one that speaks to you.

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Joan Miro


Read the wall text.

Here's the part where you get a clue, if you're so inclined. While the title will not, and should not, explain the piece, it could illuminate an aspect of it or an angle from which to view it you hadn't noticed before. Let the work's verbal and visual components bounce off each other, and harmonize. You may not get closer to understanding, you may even wind up more confused. It's all part of the process. Also, you could wind up with an untitled piece.

Along with the work's title, knowing the era and geographical origin of the artwork will also help acclimate you to the atmosphere from which the piece emerged. To again quote Kandinsky, art and literature reflect "the dark picture of the present time and show the importance of what at first was only a little point of light noticed by few and for the great majority non-existent. Perhaps they even grow dark in their turn, but on the other hand they turn away from the soulless life of the present towards those substances and ideas which give free scope to the non-material strivings of the soul."

What would a work like this say about the world from which it came? The essence may be so radical it couldn't yet be put into words.

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Ellsworth Kelly


Remember, some artists don't even know, or care, what their work means.

This is the part where you take a deep breath and fully accept the fact that you're working outside the realm of answers and explanations. Even the artists themselves sometimes don't dwell over why they're making what they're making. In a talk at MoMA, famed abstractionist Ellsworth Kelly was asked about his iconic "Chatham Series," which dates back to 1972. "It's hard to remember. I'm quite impressed with them now!" He said, gesturing to the works and sighing. "But it's always a mystery looking back." If Ellsworth himself is content to marvel at the mystery of his own works, there's no reason you shouldn't be also.

Think about the fact that all art is really abstract art. And let your mind be blown.

There's an old art lovers' tale about an American soldier telling Picasso his artworks aren't close enough to life. He pulls out a photo of his fiancee and says: "This is what a picture should look like." Picasso, in typical Picasso fashion, responds: "Your girlfriend is rather small, isn’t she?" Point being, all art is abstracted from reality, or else museums would take up a lot more space.

Whether this assuages your anxiety or throws you into a downward spiral of panic is up to you. To again quote Jerry's infinite wisdom: "Abstraction is as old as we are. It has existed for millennia outside the West. It is present on cave walls, in Egyptian and Cypriot Greek art, Chinese scholar rocks, all Islamic and Jewish art -- both of which forbid representation. Abstraction is only new in the West." Abstraction was around way before your pretentious art school friend showed you his dot experiments and expected you to be impressed.

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Gerhard Richter



This is where our brief foray into the wonders of abstraction comes to a close. While this short list may not help you understand your next trip to your local modern art museum, it may alleviate some of the pressure to understand it in the first place.

What are your tips for approaching a work of abstract art? Let us know in the comments.

Elsa From 'Frozen' Has A Doppelgänger, And People Want Her To Be On 'Once Upon A Time'

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Eighteen-year-old Anna Faith looks just like Elsa from "Frozen." So much so that she's an Elsa impersonator and has thousands of fans campaigning for her to get a spot on "Once Upon A Time," ABC's fairy tale drama series that borrows characters like Prince Charming, Rumplestilsken and Snow White.

The May finale of the show revealed that Elsa would join the "OUAT," and earlier this week reports indicated that her sister Anna and Anna's buddy Kristoff would also become part of the cast. Using #AnnaAsElsa, fans have been tweeting at ABC and "OUAT," asking that Faith be given a shot to play the ice queen on primetime. E! News reported that ABC was just starting to cast the roles (Kristen Bell is so down to be Anna again!), so maybe there's a sliver of hope for Faith.

Faith is a model, singer and actress from Florida, but also works as an Elsa look-alike performing at birthday parties and elementary schools. Think she pulls it off?











Why The Body Diversity On 'Orange Is The New Black' Is So Important

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“Don’t forget, ladies. Your usual meal is 1500 calories. Beware of overeating.”

Listen closely, and you’ll hear that announcement play in the background of various episodes on the Netflix original series “Orange Is the New Black.” The words are familiar to the average viewer in this health-crazed day and age, but they come off, in the context of inmates fighting for their everyday survival, as completely absurd. Adhering to the government’s opinion of proper caloric consumption is of absolutely no concern, for example, to Red in Season 2, Episode 2, when she enters the cafeteria to the instruction's blare for the first time since a botched power play last season left her completely ostracized by the other prisoners. The idea that the people in charge at Litchfield, the same ones that regularly throw women in solitary confinement for nonviolent offenses and force them to use showers stained with human feces, would take the time to police food intake only serves to underscore their complete disregard for the inmates’ actual needs.

But outside of its absurdist function on an episodic level, the announcement also serves to clue us into a bigger undertaking at the heart of "Orange Is the New Black": to counter the mainstream narrative of bodies that fall outside the thin cultural norm.

It should come as no surprise that mainstream American media consistently dehumanizes fat bodies. Whether in health magazine articles that feature photos of headless, large bodies holding giant soda cups and brand bodies the size of the average American woman as “pre-diseased,” or in sitcoms that feature one-note characters mocked for their size, the dominant line of thought is the same: Fat people are lazy slobs who eat too much and are desperate for love. Their existence in a room is reason enough for laughter.

"Orange Is the New Black" enters a landscape that labels non-thin bodies, at best, unattractive and, at worst, diseased, and inverts the resulting stereotypes with a slew of counterexamples: Classically attractive male guard Bennett does not, as he would on a lesser show, pursue a relationship with Maritza (Diane Guerrero), who Gloria jokes “looks like Sofia Vergara,”but rather with Daya (Dasha Polanco), who has a look not readily represented on television. Elsewhere, in a reversal of the oft-repeated trope, “fat woman gets rejected in her quest for the love of a thin person,” we see Tastee (Danielle Brooks) eschew the romantic advances of Poussey (Samira Wiley). Since the show’s first season, Lea Delaria’s character Big Boo has served as a kind of Litchfield prison sexual fiend -- and while her aggressive-often-to-the-point of-harassment pursuits are not (and should not be) endorsed by the show, they do tell a very different story of how fat bodies can relate to sex than the one that says they should stringently diet and wait patiently to be skinny before they can even enter the arena.

These are just a few of the show’s dozens of three-dimension portrayals of women with bodies that fall outside the cultural norm. They all have complicated inner lives and diverse wants, goals and desires -- both romantic and otherwise. Louis CK recently received praise for depicting a fat woman on his show who calls out his character's cruel discrimination. But it’s not new fodder for television to portray a fat woman unhappy with her lot, and desperate for the love of an uninterested party. What is new is to see a larger woman pursuing sex and love with absolutely no reference to her shape, and no comments to suggest to viewers that her body should be considered anything but attractive.

The kinds of bodies we see in the media directly influence the kinds of bodies that we come to value as a society, and studies have pointed to the fact that exposure to diverse body types can make us more accepting. While we still have a long way to go before the dominant idea of what's attractive expands to include anything outside the very, very thin, we luckily have "Orange Is the New Black," steadfastly paving the way.

The Last Women Foot Binders Of China Deserve To Be Seen

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Zhang Yun Ying is a perfect specimen of grandmother, with bright white hair and profound wrinkles that get better when she smiles. But it’s her stride that really hits you -- how she balances on her heels like a kid. She can't help it: like most women who grew up in China when she did, Zhang's feet were bound until she couldn't walk straight anymore.

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A photograph of Zhang's feet, courtesy Jo Farrell.


We know this because of another woman, Jo Farrell. For nearly a decade, the British photographer -- who bills herself as a documentarian of endangered “traditions and cultures” -- has visited Zhang in her home in a small village in China annually, snapping portraits each time. As the years have passed, Farrell has met and photographed other such women, all in their eighties and nineties, their bodies visual reminders of a history not so far behind us.


Farrell’s hope is to document all the survivors she can. Time is not on her side, as she writes on a Kickstarter page for the project, “Living History”:

In the past year alone, three of the women I have been documenting have died and I feel it is now imperative to focus on recording their lives before it is too late.


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A photograph of Zhao Hua Hong taken in 2010. Copyright Jo Farrell.


Part of that imperative lies in linking us to our past, Farrell insists. Modern women aren’t so different from the grannies she’s found, she writes at Kickstarter, judging by our love of “Botox, FGM, breast augmentation, scarring and tattooing, to rib removals, toe tucks and labrets.”

Foot binding too was a status symbol. For centuries, millions of young women crushed their feet in a bid to marry well, until the Chinese government finally managed to wipe out the practice in the mid twentieth century. To attain the coveted “three-inch golden lotuses” one needed to start early. “Young bones are soft, and break more easily," a survivor of the practice told NPR in 2007. “Because I bound my own feet, I could manipulate them more gently until the bones were broken.”

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A photograph of Su Xi Rong and her husband, one of the only surviving couples Farrell has found. Copyright Jo Farrell.


There’s a difference between women like Zhang and nipped and tucked real housewives of today though, who require money to achieve their ends. All of Farrell’s subjects so far “are peasant farmers working off the land,” she writes, far from the “city life depicted so often in academia on foot binding,” full of “beautifully embroidered shoes and luxury lifestyles.”

“These incredible women [have] lived through famine, the cultural revolution (where people were penalised for the four olds: old habits, manners, custom, and culture) and family deconstruction/migration of the twentieth century," Farrell writes.

2014-06-12-Portfolio1_ZhaoHuaHong2_Farrell_J_BF12.jpg

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A photograph taken in 2007 of Hou Jun Rong sewing. Copyright Jo Farrell.


For more images of the project so far, or to further Farrell's goal of expanding it, head to Kickstarter. The deadline for funding ends this week.

Aaron Paul Offers Two Different 'Better Call Saul' Scenarios For Jesse Pinkman

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It's no news that "Breaking Bad" stars Aaron Paul and Bryan Cranston want to return for "Better Call Saul," the forthcoming spinoff series from the acclaimed AMC drama. The actors have both said that they'd love to reprise Jesse Pinkman and Walter White in their earlier days on the prequel, before the meth adventures began. Speaking to HuffPost Live host Ricky Camilleri on Friday, Paul reiterated that wish.

"Let's be honest, I don't think we're going to see more 'Breaking Bad,' but I hope we might be able to play our character again in 'Better Call Saul,' but that's not solidified," Paul said. "It's not set in stone, there's no plan of Jesse or Walt making an appearance in the first season of 'Better Call Saul.' [But] who knows? Maybe in the future seasons."

Despite that hopeful comment, Paul was far less optimistic about his "Better Call Saul" involvement when interviewed by HuffPost Entertainment in support of his new film, "Hellion."

"To be honest, it's not gonna happen," Paul said about Jesse's possible return in a separate discussion on Friday. "There's rumors floating around that I'm going to be doing it, but that's simply not the case. [...] I mean, I'm trying to let it be on the record."

Paul previously said he had "serious talks" with Vince Gilligan about returning to Jesse, but downplayed those conversations.

"We haven't talked about it," Paul said to HuffPost Entertainment. "I mean, we've joked around about it, but it's a prequel. I have no idea how [Jesse] would show up. I'm much older now. But I don't look older, I look kinda younger, which is strange." It must have been something in the meth fumes.

Watch the full HuffPost Live interview with Aaron Paul by heading here.

Judy Garland Re-Imagined In Visual Art For 'Night Of A Thousand Judys' Benefit

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It's Judy Garland as you've never seen her before.

The Hollywood legend is re-interpreted by visual artists as part of the annual "Night of a Thousand Judys" concert. The different pieces, which capture Garland in her iconic "Wizard of Oz" and live performance moments, are currently being sold via online auction. Interested buyers will also be able to bid on the works as part of a silent auction at the June 16 event, which takes place at the Merkin Concert Hall at the Kaufman Center in New York.

Participating artists this year include longtime Vanity Fair illustrator Robert Risko and Well Read Women creator Samantha Hahn. In addition, Garland gets the confectionery treatment by Jennifer Maldonado as Cookie Jar'd, and can be seen on a custom T-shirt by DEER DANA, whose pieces have been worn by A-list celebrities like Jay-Z.

Proceeds from the sale of the artwork will go directly to the Ali Forney Center, a New York advocacy group dedicated to homeless LGBT teens and young adults.

Now it its fourth year, “Night of a Thousand Judys” will feature performances by Broadway’s Rory O’Malley and Sierra Boggess along with “Queer as Folk” star Randy Harrison and singer-songwriter Erin McKeown. Also making their “Judys” debut at the event are Austin Scarlett of “Project Runway,” jazz violinist Aaron Weinstein and singer Jane Monheit, among others. The night is a special presentation of New York-based actor, writer and performer Justin Sayre's variety show “The Meeting” and timed to coincide with Pride Month.

Head here for more information on "Night of a Thousand Judys."

George Takei Reveals The War Story That Made Him Proud To Be A Gay, Japanese American

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Actor George Takei begins his TEDx talk in Kyoto with a slight smile, introducing himself as a veteran and former helmsman of the starship Enterprise. "I soared through the galaxy, driving a huge starship with a crew made up of people from all over this world... all working together."

That '60s-envisioned version of a tolerant distant future would have sounded completely alien to Takei just a decade or so earlier. As a child, Takei was taken from his home by armed men and relocated to a barbed wire prison camp. All because he, as a five-year-old, "looked like the people who bombed Pearl Harbor."

His tone describing the Japanese American experience during those war years could almost be mistaken for one of resignation, but what it sounds most like is a quiet defiance.

When the United States entered the war, he explains, young Japanese Americans left their families behind the barbed wire for segregated all-Japanese American units, weathering the most dangerous assignments to fight in the same uniform as their former guards. Their unwavering patriotism continues to defy belief.

One battle along the mountainous Gothic Line in Italy particularly underscores their bravery. In an effort to surprise German troops, Japanese American regiment the 442nd decided to scale a seemingly unscalable rock wall at night while fully outfitted. Those that slipped and fell from the height fell completely silently. These men who had been labeled "enemies, non-alien" refused, in their last moments, to give away their position.

When those that survived the battle returned to be honored on the White House lawn as the war's most decorated unit, President Truman said to them, "You fought not only the enemy, but prejudice. And you won."

"They proved being an American is not just for some people," says Takei. "They gave me a legacy, and with that legacy comes a responsibility, and I am dedicated to making my country an even better America. To making our country an even truer democracy."

That battle to protect American egalitarian ideals, Takei suggests, continues even today, if it's no longer embedded along the cliffs of the Apenine Mountains. That battle is being fought in courtrooms, in public policy, and in demonstrations of pride. It even continues, it seems, in Kyoto-based TEDx talks.

If You Want To See Chromeo Perform And Drink From The World's Largest Ice Luge, Go To Boston

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Last week, Johnny Appleseed announced that it will build the world's largest ice luge in Boston's Seaport District on Thursday, June 19, dispensing the brand's hard apple cider. HuffPost Entertainment is excited to announce that this summer kick-off event will be paired with an hour-long performance from Chromeo, tha funk lordz.

“We choose the brands that we collaborate with very carefully," said David Macklovitch, aka Dave 1. "Every time that we partner up with a brand we want to make sure it has the aspects of a real collaboration, where both sides kind of follow through. When Johnny Appleseed used the instrumental for 'Jealous' in their commercial, we wanted to follow up with more events, just so it’s more substantial and more of a story.”

Standing at least 25-feet in height, two feet higher than the previous record holder, the ice luge will be 25,000 pounds molded into the shape of a Johnny Appleseed Hard Apple Cider bottle, and will have seven taps and an ice bar surrounding it. “Nobody’s putting their mouth on anything," Macklovitch clarified. "This is a perfectly classy and hygienic installation.”

The duo released their fourth album, "White Women," in early May to all-around positive reviews, and with good reason: it's undeniably their best and most fun album yet. While Chromeo has been producing their electro-funk, disco-influenced craft since their first album, the now decade-old "She's In Control," it has only been over this past year that the group's brand of music has returned to the forefront of the audience's attention.

“I don’t understand why it hasn’t happened sooner," Macklovitch said. "Every wedding, every bar mitzvah, every office party on planet Earth they play Michael Jackson. For me it was just a matter of time before that sound was sort of re-appropriated. It’s amazing when you take a seminal group like Daft Punk, because their influence is so big. If they say go left, so many people will go left."



Discussing the potential longevity of the genre's spot in the American music scene, Macklovitch continued: “I’m not in the position to make these kind of predictions. I just hope that the music that we are making now, and that you can hear on the Daft Punk record, on the Bruno Mars record, even on Katy Perry’s 'Birthday,' that kind of influence and that kind of vibe, I hope that becomes part of the cultural fabric. It’s hard to say what sticks and what doesn’t, but one thing is for sure: P and I have always marched to the beat of our own drum, so it’s not going to change anything for us. We just try to improve in relation to our previous record.”

Those attending the event will be sure to hear the group's latest single, "Jealous (I Ain't With It)," one of the songs of this summer. While we be hearing tunes like Iggy Azalea's "Fancy" and her collaboration with Ariana Grande, "Problem," everywhere during the next three months, we asked Macklovitch to name some of the songs he'll jam to all summer long.

“I love that new thing that Drake put out last week, '0 to 100,'" Macklovitch said. "Yeah, I think that’s incredible. That’s going to be an anthem because I can see people saying it already. When it catches on like a slogan, you know it’s going to be real good. There’s a really cool hip-hop song that I listen to all the time that is totally going to be a song of the summer, it’s Snootie Wild called 'Yayo.' YG 'Who Do You Love?' with Drake as well. Yeah, those are my joints. There’s a bunch of other stuff that’s cool, but it’s the stuff that everybody knows.”

The event on June 19, hosted by Jenny Dell, begins at 7:00 p.m., and Chromeo will go onstage at 8:30 p.m. Those who are 21 and older can RSVP for the event.

“Whenever we do something that’s a 21 and over event, we stress the responsibility angle," Macklovitch said. "That’s really important to us. A lot of band’s music has that stigma of being very debaucherous. That’s not the image we project with Chromeo at all. I think P and I consider ourselves role models in that respect and so whenever we get a chance to talk about drinking responsibly, we do that. I think it’s our role as musicians to do that."

Dallas Nagata White Shows Us The Many Brilliant Faces Of Hawaii's Full Moon (PHOTOS)

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Many generations ago, the people of Hawaii survived on the islands by listening to the patterns of the Earth and observing the many phases of the moon in a starry sky.

Poepoe, the 10-day phase of the full moon, meant abundance -- it was a time of the year when the fishing would bring a plentiful harvest, feeding many mouths and keeping the community alive. But it was also a time of great beauty and wonder, as the mountains and sea were illuminated under the bright light of the moon, and in so many ways, that wonder and beauty still echoes through the islands today.

On a night like tonight -- a supposed eerie full moon on Friday the 13th -- we invite you to instead embrace and admire the natural marvel of that celestial sphere.

Below, observe the beauty of the full moon's many brilliant faces from the islands of Hawaii, Oahu and Kauai, as seen through the lens of Dallas Nagata White:

lanikai

purple lava

city moon

lava full

full moon over field

man and moon

palms and moon

orangemoon

reaching for moon

stars moon mts

waikiki moon

moon and cliff

Want to see more of life in Hawaii through the eyes of Dallas Nagata White? You can follow her work on Instagram and Facebook, or purchase custom prints here.

The Delightfully Queer Lineup At The 2014 Provincetown International Film Festival

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Pack your bags, the 2014 Provincetown International Film Festival (PIFF) kicks off June 18 with stellar programming and plenty of parties. Unofficially queer (but still gay as, well, a weekend in P-town), the festival lineup includes a vast array of LGBT-themed films, several of which also screened at this year's Cannes, Sundance and SXSW film festivals.

Following the opening night screening of her latest film, "Last Weekend," directed by Tom Dolby and Tom Williams, Academy Award nominee Patricia Clarkson will receive the 2014 Excellence in Acting Award. A special ceremony on Saturday, June 21, at Provincetown Town Hall will honor three-time Academy Award nominee Debra Winger, the recipient of the Faith Hubley Memorial Achievement Award; John Waters, PIFF's resident artist, will present director David Cronenberg ("A History of Violence," "Eastern Promises") with the Filmmaker on the Edge Award at the event.

Representing a diverse cross-section of filmography, PIFF's 2014 lineup of queer-themed programming:

Documentary Features
"An Honest Liar" -- directed by Justin Weinstein & Tyler Measom

"Compared to What: The Improbable Journey of Barney Frank" -- directed by Sheila Canavan & Michael Chandler


"Mala Mala" -- directed by Antonio Santini & Dan Sickles

"Sharon Isbin: Troubadour" -- directed by Susie Dangel

"The Case Against 8" -- directed by Ben Cotner & Ryan White


"The Dog" -- directed by Allison Berg & Frank Keraudren

"The Last One" -- directed by Nadine Licostie

Narrative Features
"52 Tuesdays" -- directed by Sophie Hyde

"A Reunion" -- directed by Hernando Bansuelo

"Appropriate Behavior" -- directed by Desiree Akhaven


"Drunktown's Finest" -- directed by Sydney Freeland

"Last Weekend" -- directed by Tom Dolby & Tom Williams

"Love is Strange" -- directed by Ira Sachs


"The Way He Looks" -- directed by Daniel Ribeiro

Shorts
"Dragula" -- directed by Frank Meli

"Families Are Forever" -- directed by Vivian Kleiman

"God I Hope I Get It" -- directed by Leonora Pitts

"Good Morning" -- directed by Peter Knegt & Stephen Dunn

"Hector: Lost Souls with Switchblades" -- directed by Jeff Compton

"In My Skin" -- directed by Alejandro Rodriguez

"Last Farewell" -- directed by Casper Andreas

"Lavender Hill: A Love Story" -- directed by Austin Bunn


"Living in the Overlap" -- directed by Mary M. Dalton & Cindy Hill

"Paper Wrap Fire" -- directed by Raymond Yeung

"Safe Word" -- directed by Todd Lillethun

"Trevor" -- directed by Peggy Rajski

"Unconditional" -- directed by Rhonda Chan Soo, Kelly McKenna & Hanna Teachey

Not-To-Be-Missed Non-Queer Features
"A Master Builder" -- directed by Jonathan Demme

"Art and Craft" -- directed by Sam Cullman & Jen Grausman

"Fort Tilden" -- directed by Sarah Violet-Bliss & Charles Rogers

"Obvious Child" -- directed by Gillian Robespierre


"The Overnighters" -- directed by Jesse Moss

"Venus in Fur" -- directed by Roman Polanski


"Videodrome" & "The Fly" -- directed by David Cronenberg



The 16th annual Provincetown International Film Festival takes place June 18-22 in Provincetown, Massachusetts.

Biz Markie Celebrates 25th Anniversary Of 'Just A Friend,' Promotes Healthy Living With New Cola Partnership

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Biz Markie's knack for gracing a hip-hop track with vivid lyrics and his trademark beatboxing has swayed countless amounts of fans around the globe for over 20 years.

And as Markie, born Marcell Hall, famously professed on his 1988 track "Nobody Beats The Biz," when it comes to rocking parties he is "a nymphomaniac, brainiac for doing" his dance, which is something he has been doing more frequently this year as he celebrates his 50th birthday and the 25th anniversary of his classic hit "Just A Friend."

Since its release in 1989, "Just A Friend" has gone on to etch its mark in pop culture, resonating every few years with a new generation of fans. The song has turned up in various advertising campaigns and provided the chorus for teen singer Austin Mahone's 2012 hit "Say You're Just A Friend."

In a recent interview with The Huffington Post, Markie said that recording the notable track -- which interpolates Freddie Scott's "(You) Got What I Need" -- took a full five years, due to Markie's quest to find the song's hard-hitting drums. That search eventually concluded thanks to Markie's close friends, the hip-hop pioneers Grand Wizzard Theodore and Danny Dan the Beatman.

"I was looking for the drums since '84, but I never knew the name of them," Markie told HuffPost. "Grand Wizzard Theodore brought me to Danny Dan the Beatman's house. So we were playing around and made a tape."

"All of sudden, Danny calls me and says 'Is this the record you were looking for?' And he played [Freddie Scott] over the phone. So I drove over straight from Jersey with this other dude from Trenton, and I traded him Barbra Streisand's 'A Star is Born' for that record, and I gave him $200 for the 'You Got What I Need' record ... I knew if I found those drums it was going to be a hit."

The rapper, who in recent years has appeared regularly on Nickelodeon's "Yo Gabba Gabba!," told HuffPost that he initially reached out to R&B singers Keith Sweat, Al B. Sure, and fellow Juice Crew member T.J. Swan as candidates to sing the now-famous chorus, but ultimately decided to use his own vocals due to scheduling conflicts. He also discussed the song's enduring relevance, comparing it to other classic hits like Slick Rick's "Lodi Dodi."

"It's just one of those records that's a good record that you can't get tired of hearing. Whether it's the hook, whether it's the words. One of them good, good records," he said. "You don't get tired of hearing [Maze & Frankie Beverly's] 'Before I Let Go.'"

In addition to celebrating his hit song's milestone, Markie is also advocating for healthy living as the brand ambassador for Zevia soda. He credits his recent 140-pound weight loss to a balanced diet, exercise and consuming the sugar-free and zero-calorie cola. Markie admitted that his drastic change of lifestyle came following a health scare in which he discovered that he had diabetes.

"When I went in the hospital for dehydration three or four years ago, I had to get 15 to 16 bags of IV," he told HuffPost. "So I said, 'If I want to live, I will have to change my life format.'"

This fall, Markie will be returning to television in an attempt to find a girl "to settle down with" on a forthcoming reality show tentatively titled "Taking Care of Biz."

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